speeches · April 10, 2013
Regional President Speech
James Bullard · President
Opening remarks by President James Bullard
2013 Federal Reserve System Community Development Research Conference
Resilience and Rebuilding for Low-Income Communities: Research to Inform Policy and
Practice
Washington, D.C.
April 11, 2013
I am delighted to be here today representing the Federal Reserve System’s Conference of
Presidents through my chairmanship of the Conference’s Committee on Research, Public
Information, and Community Affairs.
The Conference of Presidents strongly supports the Federal Reserve System’s outreach and
research efforts in the community development arena. These efforts involve the skills of
employees in many different divisions within the Federal Reserve and in many different
locations across the U.S.A. An especially important role that the Fed’s Community
Development function plays is in connecting the nation’s central bank with Main Street
America. At the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, and indeed throughout the Federal Reserve
System, we have heard first-hand how both longer-term changes in the economy and the
lingering damage from the 2007-2009 recession continue to challenge many households and
businesses.
The broad level of performance of the U.S. economy is, of course, vital to the well-being of
individual families and local communities. However, it is also clear that even good
macroeconomic performance is not a panacea because it does not ensure that all families and
communities are included, or more fully included, in all aspects of the economy. Although
“economic inclusion” or “financial inclusion” cannot be guaranteed, the Federal Reserve System
can be a positive force in providing opportunities and knowledge that can help families and
communities find ways to more fully participate in the economic success of the nation. Better
results on inclusion may ultimately create an economy that makes the fullest possible use of its
rich array of available talent.
The Community Development function tries to make progress on this financial inclusion
objective by focusing on five areas:
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Household financial stability;
Neighborhood revitalization and stabilization;
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Small-business start-up, growth and sustainability;
Thought leadership to achieve scale, sustainability and impact; and
Communication of lessons learned.
The Fed’s Community Development function is actively engaged in each of these areas. A few
examples might include the Kansas City Fed’s “Grow Your Own” initiative to focus on
opportunities for entrepreneurship in rural America. The San Francisco Fed combined
thoughtful research and outreach through the publication of “Investing in What Works for
America’s Communities.” At the St. Louis Fed, we recently launched the Center for Household
Financial Stability to research family balance sheets and how those matter for strengthening
households and the economy. Several Reserve banks and the Board of Governors have come
together to produce the “Connecting Communities” audio-conference series to address cuttingedge topics among community development practitioners. And many Reserve banks, including
my own, have been instrumental in “Bank-On Save-Up” campaigns to offer thousands of
unbanked Americans nationwide pathways to wealth-building financial services.
These examples indicate how the Fed’s Community Development function is helping to address
the key issues by convening stakeholders, identifying emerging ideas, and—consistent with my
academic bent—conducting primary and applied research.
The theme for this conference is “Resilience and Rebuilding.” The 2007-2009 recession
disrupted the economic life of the nation. Families and communities have been challenged
with job losses, foreclosures, reduced or limited compensation, and high debt. The pressure on
public and private safety nets has accordingly been high. These events have tested and
continue to test the resilience of many households and communities. A primary challenge is
how to increase this resilience going forward so that a given shock has a lessened adverse
effect in the future than it had in the past.
This conference is not restricted to resilience—it’s also about rebuilding for a brighter future.
Improved labor market performance and better workforce preparation are central to a better
future for the U.S. economy. Small-business development and sustainability will also be
central; much of the expansion in the labor market comes from this group. Researchers have
much to learn about small businesses and the flows of credit that affect their growth and
development.
Although the Fed’s Community Development function at its broadest level is about promoting
inclusion in the American dream, we do so with careful awareness of policy pitfalls. Not so long
ago, the American dream was intimately associated with homeownership. In the stark light of
recent events, many households found that the reality of homeownership was a nightmare
rather than something idyllic. Poor public policy undoubtedly contributed to the housing
bubble and the resulting recession. Due in large part to his research background, my
predecessor, Bill Poole, foresaw and warned about many of the problems that resulted from
the badly overleveraged government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Research can play a major role not only in the design of wise policies, but also in avoiding the
continuation of unwise policies. Many of the papers on the program of this conference focus
on evaluating effectiveness of public policies. Rigorous and detached assessments of policy
that combine theory with empirical analysis can yield important inputs for decision makers.
On behalf of the Conference of Presidents, let me commend the Atlanta Fed and the Board for
their excellent work in pulling together this conference. Some of you may know that the Board
of Governors, starting in 1999, has been rotating through the Reserve banks for its partners in
organizing this important event every other year. St. Louis is up in 2015. Thankfully, our team
will be able to build upon the great ideas and lessons provided by others, most especially the
excellent example the Board and Atlanta have provided this year.
Thank you and welcome to the 2013 Community Development conference on “Resilience and
Rebuilding.”
James Bullard, President and CEO
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Cite this document
APA
James Bullard (2013, April 10). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20130411_james_bullard
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20130411_james_bullard,
author = {James Bullard},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2013},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20130411_james_bullard},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}